University of Wisconsin - Madison Materials Research Science and
Engineering Center Education
and Outreach

A Presidential Event on Color Chemistry
Co-Sponsored by the
Committee on Science
and the
Division of Chemical Education
   American Chemical Society 
Spring National Meeting
Anaheim, CA
March 21, 1999

Program
Session 1 "Pushing the Rainbow: Frontiers in Color Chemistry"

Meeting Report appears in June 1999 issue of Journal of Chemical Education

The organizers gratefully acknowledge the generous financial support provided by:

8:50am   - Introductory Remarks. 9:00am   - 1. "Coloring the Curriculum - from Kindergarten through College" 9:25am   - 2. "An introduction to the wonderful world of color" 9:50am   - 3. "Light and  Color in Liquid Crystalline Materials" 10:15am - 4. "Phosphors and Organic LEDs" 10:40am - Intermission.

10:50am - 5. "Exploring Color and Periodic Properties with Light-Emitting Diodes and Diode Lasers"

11:15am - 6. "Quantum dots: casting light on fundamentals with cutting-edge research" 11:40am - 7. "Color and light in the movies"

A number of products, including the new, blue LEDs, will be given away throughout the symposium - so be sure to attend!!!

Session 2 Light and Color in Chemistry

Abstracts:

Introductory Remarks


Ed Wasserman, President of ACS (left), giving welcoming remarks. Arthur Ellis, symposium organizer (right), giving opening remarks.

1.    COLORING THE CURRICULUM-FROM KINDERGARTEN THROUGH COLLEGE.
                John W. Moore, Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1101 University
                Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53706.


Acrobat .pdf file of John Moore's presentation .

2.    AN INTRODUCTION TO THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF COLOR.
                Lawrence D. Woolf, General Atomics, P. O. Box 85608, San Diego, CA 92186

Acrobat .pdf file of Larry Woolf's presentation .

3.    LIGHT AND COLOR IN LIQUID CRYSTALLINE MATERIALS.
                Lee. Y. Park, Department of Chemistry, Williams College, Williamstown, MA 01267.

Web page showing images from Lee Park's presentation .

4.    PHOSPHORS AND ORGANIC LEDS
                Michael J. Sailor, University of California,  San Diego, La Jolla, CA, 92093-03358

Acrobat .pdf file of Mike Sailor's presentation .

5.    EXPLORING COLOR AND PERIODIC PROPERTIES WITH LIGHT-EMITTING DIODES AND DIODE LASERS.
                George C. Lisensky, Beloit College, S. Michael Condren, Christian Brothers University, Karen
                J. Nordell, and Arthur B. Ellis,  University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Acrobat .pdf file of Ellis Group's presentation .


Undergraduates Brian Frick, left, and Nick Stanton, right, assemblying blue LED circuits.


6.     QUANTUM DOTS: CASTING LIGHT ON FUNDAMENTALS WITH CUTTING-EDGE RESEARCH.
                Mary Jane Shultz, Department of Chemistry, Pearson Laboratory, Tufts University,
                Medford, MA 02155.

Acrobat .pdf files of Mary Schultz's presentation and handout on Quantum Dots .

7.    COLOR AND LIGHT IN THE MOVIES.
                K. R. C. Gisser, Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, NY 14560

Acrobat pdf file of Kathy Gisser's bibliography .

THE ROYAL PURPLE AND THE BIBLICAL BLUE.
Roald Hoffmann, Dept. of Chemistry, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. 14853

THE QUEST FOR COLOR IN PHOTOGRAPHIC IMAGES
John Schaefer, President, Research Corporation THE COLOR OF CHEMISTRY: A PHOTOGRAPHER'S PERSPECTIVE
Felice Frankel, MIT, Room 4-405, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139


Exploring the Nanoworld   |   MRSEC Nanostructured Interfaces
Copyright © 2006 The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System.